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A foreign legion of investors will be scouring the Barclays Premiership for takeover targets as the value of teams soars, propelling as many as ten teams into Europe’s rich list. Even though the latest 2006 Deloitte Football Money League shows the top English clubs slipping down the order, with Real Madrid consolidating their position as Europe’s most financially powerful club, followed by Barcelona, the results are likely to prove a blip.
Premiership clubs are about to share income from the sale of broadcasting rights worth £2.1 billion. The winners of the Premiership title will receive £50 million in the 2007-08 season, a massive increase from the £30.4 million paid to Chelsea in 2005-06, while even the bottom club will receive £10 million more than the £17 million Sunderland received last season.
The strength of the Premiership as a brand known around the globe means that Deloitte expects at least half the European Money League top 20 to be made up of English clubs within two years, with even some unfashionable teams muscling their way past foreign counterparts.
The Premiership’s sheer financial strength in depth is underlined by the fact that, of eight English clubs in the Money League, three — Tottenham Hotspur, Manchester City and West Ham United — have not played in the lucrative Champions League. Dan Jones, the editor of the Money League report, said: “The spread of money throughout the English clubs is much greater than in other countries. The Premiership has much more strength in depth and the new television deals will mean that English clubs will make a strong showing in future.”
The takeover of Liverpool by George Gillett Jr and Tom Hicks, the American tycoons, is the latest stage of a foreign invasion — but it will probably not be the last. According to Jones, clubs outside the English Big Four of Manchester United, Chelsea, Arsenal and Liverpool are laying foundations that could make them profitable, even without winning the Premiership title. “There are signs that clubs in the middle of the Premiership can be extremely well-off, even if they are not vying for the honours on the pitch,” he said. “That is unlike the situation in Spain, Italy, Germany or France, where a few clubs dominate.”
United, traditionally Eu-rope’s richest club, slipped to fourth, behind the two Spanish clubs and Juventus, in 2005-06. But Real, who earned £202 million, and Barcelona (£179.1 million) have recently signed two huge television deals, while Juventus depend on the sale of broadcasting rights for 70 per cent of their income of £173.7 million but face being hit hard as the impact is felt of their relegation from Serie A after a match-rigging scandal.
United’s income slipped for the third year running, to £167.8 million, according to the report, but new sponsorship deals, bigger television revenues and success on the field should revive the club’s standing. Chelsea (£152.8 million) are down one place to sixth but also have new deals pending.
Arsenal, with earnings of £133 million, move up a place to ninth on the back of the £24 million they made from television rights as Champions League runners-up, but the increased capacity of their new Emirates Stadium will help them to climb the table next year, while Liverpool (£121.7 million) slip two places to tenth.
West Ham (£60.1 million) join the elite for the first time, in nineteenth place, thanks to their FA Cup run last season, while Newcastle United (£85.9 million) are thirteenth, Tottenham (£74.1 million) fifteenth and Manchester City (£61.8 million) seventeenth.
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It is true that UK born footballers are well behind their counter parts, and not just in Europe, in technical skills, and even team tactics and strategy. Nonetheless it really is,by far, the most exciting to watch.
It is not a deliberate "entertain at all costs" approach. Deep in the English pyche is the "they might not be much good but at lest they have a good go" mentality.
I know : I have supported Aston Villa for 61 years in which time they have won The Cup once (1957) and The League once (1981). Thge only time I feel like refusing to watch them is when the do not even try.
Peter Bolt, Redditch, UK
Being a United fan I dont really pay too much attention the revenue of the club. Yes I want us to have the best players, but topping the revenue table pales into insignificance compared to winning any form of silverware.
The majority of this vast TV revenue should be poored into grass routes programmes offering our kids the opportunity to develop their talents in the best facilities possible, not lining the pockets of fat cat investors and playboy football players. The FA should take the first step and put in place initiatiaves to grow this p[art of the game. http://www.man-utd-news.blogspot.com
Man Utd Agent, Manchester,
The gap between rich and small continues to get wider but the money in England is mostly wasted. Ridiculous transfer fees for average players is only matched by the equally ludicrous wages. It is now not only big clubs with glorious history outwith the big 5 leagues such as Ajax, Benfica and Celtic that will struggle to compete, clubs from France and Germany in particular, and to a lesser extent Italy and Spain will also start to feel the pinch as wages in England climb to astronomical levels.
With the Champions League already structured in favour of the big leagues, with Chelsea for example making more if they finished with zero points than Ajax would by winning the competition, it can only go on for so long before the clubs from smaller leagues and are forced to take decisive action and form some sort of breakaway, especially if as expected they cannot compete with mediocre english premiership sides for players.
The only alternative is to sit tight and wait. The level of television revenue in England is unsustainable and the bubble will burst at some point, leaving a lot of clubs in dire trouble with players on big wages and long term contracts. Until then these clubs must produce their own players if they are to have chance of being competitive.
What football needs is to somehow follow the template of the NFL where anyone can rise to the top with good management, not how deep their pockets are. Unfortunately due to the regional structure of european soccer, combined with EU laws, this is almost unworkable
The people's beautiful game may be lost to corporate suits forever
David Boyle, Glasgow, UK
All the money spent. And where is the English game headed?
One would think that the so-called 'best league in the world' would boast a national team (England) to match. But on the evidence of the World Cup just passed, the latest Euro 2008 games and the friendly defeat to Spain, the English footballer is slipping backwards all the time.
It is the foreigners who are the stars in the Premiership and whose influence gets Liverpool, United, Chelsea and Arsenal to the European finals and semi-finals. We can't lose sight of that.
If money is going to be spent, why not spend it (or at least a good chunk of it on improving the deplorable technical skills of the young English, Irish, Scottish and Welsh player - the way it used to be) and maybe then the dependence on expensive foreign imports will go away.
The Premiership is on a self-destructive path of 'entertain at all costs' - the last formidable England team was that in the early 70's. The facts don't lie.
Mark, Boston,